Members of the anti-fracking group Boulder County Protectors protest against Boulder County Commissioner Elise Jones at a house on the 700 block of Marine Street in Boulder. However, Jones said that while she is one of the owners of the property, she hasn’t lived there for almost five years.

Anti-fracking activists wrote a news release about a demonstration they staged Sunday outside a home in Boulder where they thought Boulder County Commissioner Elise Jones lives.

But Jones hasn’t lived in the house on Marine Street for nearly five years.

In a news release, an organization identifying itself as Boulder County Protectors said about 50 community members had marched “on a home of politically compromised Boulder County commissioner Elise Jones asking her to resign.”

“Happily, no one was at home, but as you might imagine, the current residents were very confused when they came home to find an oil drum in the driveway and threatening chalk messages drawn up and down the sidewalk and the steps to the house,” Jones wrote in an email Sunday night.

“I went over to apologize and to try and clean everything up,” she said.

Cliff Willmeng, of East Boulder County United, one of the groups with members at the Sunday demonstration, acknowledged on Monday afternoon that they’d thought Jones lived on Marine Street because she is listed in public records as one of the owners of the property.

He said that “if community members mistake an address, we can always go back and fix it,” but if the county commissioners and the oil and gas industry make a mistake, “homes blow up and people die.”

Anti-frackers earlier this year held demonstrations earlier this year outside commissioner Cindy Domenico’s home in Lafayette and commissioner Deb Gardner’s home in Longmont.

Faced with the personal anguish wrought by the school shooting in Parkland, Florida that left 17 dead, Trump pledged action, saying: “We don’t want others to go through the kind of pain you’ve been through.”